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PAGE TWO -
illiam Saroyan Uncorks ‘Secret’ Technique
Daily
a n
- PAGE FOUR -
Norman Thomas Blasts
\
Socialism’s Critics
ol. XLI
72
Los Angeles, Calif., Monday, Mar. 20, 1950
Nlfht Phone RL 5472
No. 98
oed Office Aspirants to Be ominated at Noon Assembly
Candidates for AWS and YWCA offices and for URA en’s chairman will be introduced at the nominations as-bly in Bovard auditorium at noon today.
Speeches will be limited to one minute with the excep-of the presidential nominations and acceptance speech-
* es which may be three minutes long. Other candidates will merely accept nomination.
Candidates will be seated on the stage and nominators will speak from the floor. Both must wear suits and heels.
NEW PROCEDURE Elections are scheduled for Mar. 29. The new AWS procedure requires voters to number candidates in the order of their preference, Dorothy Walker, elections commissioner, will explain the system during the assembly.
OFFICE APPLICANTS Women who have applied for AWS offices are Nicola Hastert. president; Jeanne Eaton, Darleen Farrell. Jean Goen. Mary Jensen, and Beverly Walker, vice-president; Donna Coots, Dorothy Fucci. Marilyn Judd. Roline Rice, Carolyn Schiller, and Ila Weibel, secretary; and Francis Blevins, Jacqueline Brown, Jacque Lee Cannon. Janet
Finances t All-Time gh in 1949
spent more money last year at any time in its 70-year ry—approximately $15 million ;Ording to the annual financial jrt to the Board of Trustees, out one-third of this was due lhe new building program, the Itest ever attempted by the Unity.
ith th** majority of veterans g graduated this year and next, a decline in tuition expected, budget for the next two years j Ewart. Mary Lupfer. and Dare Robe cut back, according to Ro- land, treasurer.
YWCA candidates are Jane Aven and Wanda Lowry, president; Betty Yerxa, first vioe-president; Candy Allen, second vice-president; Pat Davis. Grace Wada. and Jane Sang-ster. secretary; and Nanette Howe, treasurer.
All candidates and their nominators should be at Bovard by 11:50 a.m.
D. Fisher, financial vice-presi-
dowment funds remain the versity's greatest need, Fisher SC had slightly more than million in endowment assets at end of the fiscal year, f the $14,630,108 spent last year, report showed that $5,066,500 for educational and general ex-ses, an increase of more than ,000 over the previous year. This j to salary raises and addit- i 1 personnel.
ther expenditures included sc- 1 ific research. $931, 228; library j $356,758; and student aid. 4.960.
w Students o Ask tor ite Diploma
Aost law students don't care for size and general design of their lomas.
Mwin Beach, member of the law dents’ Board of. Governors, said board is going to propose that ! new. larger, more distinguished king sheepskin be given grad-tes.
The appearance of the diploma is greater importance to graduates the professional schools than it to those leaving LAS.
Law, medical, and dental grads g their “graduation passports” their office walls, where it is pposed to invoke a feeling of con-dence in prospective customers. Draftsman J. Campbell, of the udio of Lettering and Design, ill create the new diploma.
The design, when completed, will ave to be approved by the law hool faculty and the department f development before it can be "opted.
NICOLA HASTERT For AWS President
Ukrainian Zeal Shown'in Film Classic Tonight
“Arsenal," a film of revolution In Russia, will be shown tonight at 8 in the Film Classics series in Hancock auditorium.
The film, made by Alexander Dovzhenko in 1929, is based on the revolutions in the Ukraine after World War L The Ukrainians, having no voice in the Russian government, were stimulated by oppression to fight against the Tsar.
In an attempt to show the spirit of the Ukrainian working class, Dovzhenko made a film that is a series of images built on each other to convey his ideas and emotions.
Dovzhe^nko’s scenes of the wartime front, and the soldiers return- | ing to the misery at home, have I been acclaimed as poetic images. 1 They are evidence of a hatred for j brutality and a faith in humanity j that is profoundly universal and grows in significance.
Tickets for the film series may be obtained at the ticket office for $3.
Senate Hears NSA Leader Deny Red Ties
Robert Kelly, president of the National S tudent association, told the ASSC Senate Friday that the NSA is neither Communist-dominated, controlled, nor backed.
NSA has been screened by the FBI and by educational'groups of which it is a member, Kelly said. “There is a possibility of Communist infiltration, but there is that possibility in every American organization todap. We do not intend to make martyrs of the Communists
by kicking them out,” he said. *---——-
Kelly pointed to the association’s
Shaw P!ay Moves Into Bovard Thursday
DR. ALBERT F. ZECH Looting Drops
Patrol Prowls
Police Operate To End Thefts
City police have notified the administration that 24 hour patrols are operating to halt the outbreak of thievery from cars parked on campus.
“The difficulty is that the thief must be observed in the act of looting to be arrested,” said Lt. P. W. Freestone of the University police station.
“Special effort by both police and students must be made at night. Students can help by securely lock-
stand toward affiliation with the j International Union of Students as indicative of NSA policy. By a unanimous vote the NSA Congress j unanimously reaffirmed its previous i decision to refuse affiliation with j IUS, which has been called a Com- j munist front organization.
A brilliant speaker, Kelly gave a . 45-minute talk built around three questions—What is NSA? What does it stand for? What has it done?
Taking the title National Students association, Kelly first defined the word “association” and
Students May Aid Faculty Senate
by SHIRLEY ICKES
International theater month will be commemorated by the SC drama department with its production of George Ber- n-,
nard Shaw's “Fanny's First Play” Thursday night in Bovard £sjhe,r automobiles, Ueutonant
auditorium.
This month, as proclaimed by UNESCO, is concerned
with the “service the theater can*-----
render to international understand-
reater-U
. committee members meet for Rod picture at noon. Check 419 tudent Union for location.
SC Chaplain To Talk Today
The necessity and desirability of being more uninformed than in-J formed will be discussed by the Rev. Clinton Neyman, in his address “If We Knew All the Answers” at noon today in Bowne : hall.
“Our certainties are fewer than our uncertainties,” he said, “and i religion, like science and all knowledge. is a constant venture into the unknown. We cannot be sure what the future holds in any aspect of j our life.”
Chaplain Neyman said that not knowing enough answers is, often embarrassihg to college students, but he emphasized his talk would not reveal how to prepare for examinations or ensure higher grade-point averages.
He opined that we may think we want to be sure of the future but questioned that we really wanted this.
William Gayland will be th^ chapel soloist.
IR Director To Give Talk
Dr. Ross N. Berkes. director of the School of International Relations. will discuss the value of a degree and the best way to prepare for a career in International Relations at an informal meeting of the IR student body in the Student lounge tomorrow night.
The discussion will be of value to students in international relations. economics, law. and political science.
Today s Headlines
by UNITED PRESS
dgar Rice Burroughs Dies
Mar. 19—Edgar Rice Burroughs. 74, creator of the “Tar-n” stories, died this morning at his home in Encino.
ationalists Strike at Mainland
TAIPEI. Formosa. Mar. 18—Chinese Nationalist forces turned to the mainland in a dawn landing today and seized Communist coastal city some 200 miles south of Shanghai.
elgian Cabinet Resigns
BRUSSELS, Belgium, Mar. 18—Premier Gaston Eyskens and hia divided cabinet resigned today in the political crisis created by bitter dispute over King Leopold’s return to the throne.
Mrs. Madsen Sentenced
FRANKFURT, Germany, Mar. 18—Mrs. Yvette Madsen was found guilty today of murdering her Air Force husband. She was sentenced to 15 years imprisonment.
ing and to the long battle for freedom. justice, and the rights of man.”
Shaw's plays have long been international favorites, playing in almost all parts of the world, and appealing to all nationalities.
His popularity is evidenced by the fact that two of his plays, “The Devil's Disciple” and “Caesar and Cleopatra," are playing on Broadway now.
An iconoclast. Shaw has continually denounced social injustices. His first plays, which he began writing after 1894, were published but not produced. They were all concerned with social problems and were read as much for their discursive prefaces as for the plays themselves
In 1910 the Shaw craze began and has never ceased. Shaw was accepted as a great playwright, a fact which he himself is the first to admit.
In “Fanny’s First Play” Shaw displays his idol-busting approach by attacking the complacency of the middle classes whose lives are surrounded by Victorian conserva-atism.
The play will run through Mar. 28, with the exception of Sunday. Admission is free with activity cards.
Cal Red Oath Is Panel Topic
Loyalty oath pros and cons will be aired by three School of Education professors at 2:15 this afternoon.
Drs. Frank C. Wegener. Wendell E. Cannon, and James D. Finn will discuss the issues raised by the University of California’s Board of Regents requiring all Cal staff members to sign a loyalty pledge.
The panel is a program in the forum series, sponsored by the Education council. The discussion will take place in 205 Administration building.
A question period will follow the panel's treatment of the question. The forum is open to all students and faculty members.
YWCA Will Hear English Educator
Social life and living conditions at German universities will be discussed this afternoon by Betty Collins. English educator who has worked with DP and other European students for several years.
Miss Collins will stress the differences between German and English universities, and the problems of every day life in Europe, in her talk at the YWCA at 2:15 p.m.
She has been in charge of the Quaker student center of the American Friends Service committee in Freiburg, since 1947. and she did much to combat postwar cynicism.
Freestone said.
Police officials are of the opinion that added lighting in parking areas would help to halt the thefts. They also believe the new parking lots are a likely spot for the thieves to strike.
Dr. Albert Zech, counsellor of men, noted that complaints of looting have dropped off during the past week.
Clerics to Hear Peace Apostle
“An Analysis of the Neo-Ortho-dox Position of War and Peace” will be the topic of two talks by A. J. Muste, theological lecturer, tomorrow and Wednesday in the Common room of the SC School of Religion.
Muste's first talk will be given
SC Debaters Beat Scotland
A shift-of-opinion ballot cast by an audience of 600 gave a majority vote to an SC debate team over a two-man team from Scotland Friday night in Bovard auditorium.
The SC team of Omar Kureishi and Ed Stegman took the negative on the topic, “Resolved, that this house looks with favor on the revival of nationalism in Europe and Asia.” The Scottish team of Dr. !
Malcolm David Webster Low and David D. T. Reid took the affirmative.
Dr. Low, the first speaker for the ! affirmative, stressed the points j
that nationalism is a liberating ^urjng n0on luncheon assembly and benefiting force and that it is -n Common room of the School an instinctive emotion for which Qf Religion:
there must be an outlet for expres- The second ta.llc will be heard at sion. He differentiated between re- Wednesday noon chapel serv-
actionary nationalism which is bom -ce Qommon room.
Muste, who has been called the “Apostle of Peace," recently re-! turned from a month's travel and study in India.
His Southern California speaking I tour is sponsored by the Fellowship ! ' of Reconciliation, Pacific South- I i west region.
Muste has been a lecturer at the 1 I Union Theological seminary. Divin- | ity School of Yale university.
Both lectures are open to stu-1 dents.
SC to Open New Building Alumni Day
Trojans of today will honor Trojans of the past and future in a double celebration combining Alumni day and the dedication of the new SC Founders Hall May 20.
Bernard Brennan, attorney, has been named by Gwynn Wilson, president of the General Alumni association, as general chairman of the day.
A program has been planned which will feature a series of symposiums by schools and departments of the University in addition to a special assembly and luncheon for returning graduates.
The day's activities are under the direction of Arnold Eddy, executive secretary of’the association.
Founders Hall is now being completed on the site of Old College.
Mexico Students Tour SC Campus
Thirty Mexican engineering students visited the SC School of Engineering Friday on their goodwill tour of the United States.
They were welcomed by Dr. Kenneth Reynolds, head of the department of general engineering, and Raymond Barber, assistant to Dean
to improve its functions. If it felt such a move would make its work more effective, it would invite the president of ASSC to appoint a man or woman, or both, to be con-
i sidered for the position, was officially accepted by the Sen- I _ , ..
If the group approved the nomate at its last meeting. ination, the student body president The report came from a commit- ; would appoint the person to the tee which had discussed the issue 1 committee as a non-voting member.
A motion that the administration consider appointing non-voting student members to standing committees of the University Senate, if a particular committee so desires,
at some length before drawing up the final resolution.
Under the new suggestion, each committee would consider the advisability of student membership
The University Senate, composed of 74 faculty and administrative officers, serves as an advisory board for the administration. Its decisions are not final rulings but are merely recommendations.
More Restrictions
0
Slapped on Parkers
of Fascism and the real nationalism which he claimed was the essential step in the emancipation of common man.
Stegman countered with the assertion that this identification with countries makes people demand that their government exert a great influence in the world at the expense of other nations.
Titoism was touched on by Steg-Dan when he said that Tito was not reviving nationalism. He felt that it was more of a self expression.
Reid's argument was based on the fact that people rush into associations without knowing where it will take them. If they wind up in an adverse position, then they look aound for a scapegoat to blame. He said that they find this scapegoat in nationalism. He then compared nationalism to a dog which is being kicked and beaten.
Reid differed with Stegman when he said that Tito was reviving nationalism in Europe and that he was the first glimmer of hope to the world.
Kureishi, arguing his last intercollegiate debate, pointed to Russia as an example of a country reviving nationalism. He said that they use it to exploit the other small countries in Europe and Asia.
Dr. Milton Dickens, acting chairman of the department of speech, presided over the debate.
ROBERT KELLY Tells of NSA
told of the organization’s membership and powers.
“We have no individual class members in NSA.” the 20-year-old president said. “We are an association—a federation of student bodies.” As such NSA is subject to the control of the student bodies and 1 their elected governments on campus. Kelly emphasized.
RETAIN AUTONOMY
NSA's member schools retain their autonomy, he said. NSA policy is subject to the consent of the local student government. This, he said, refutes charges that NSA holds coercive power.
The association is also regional, Kelly said. There are from 24 to 26 geographical districts that serve as links between the local campus and the national organization.
Speaking on the word “student" in the organization's title, he said that the association is dedicated solely to students. “There is no political or religious partisanship in NSA,” the St. Peter’s college senior said. The organization serves students and is staffed by students.
As to the “national” part of the name, Kelly said this meant not only members in all parts of the nation, but a national ideological scope. The 320 member schools range from large state universities to small denominational colleges. TELLS AIMS
Kelly said that NSA stands for (1) promotion of student govern-(Continued on Page 4)
“Red she'll be and red she’ll 1 stay,” was the word from Ralph T. Dorsey’s traffic engineering office : Friday on the controversial red curbings on University avenue.
No-parking signs will be removed this week, and all curbs will be painted red. The total effect of this operation will be to make illegal even the unloading of passengers on University avenue from 34th street to Exposition boulevard.
Dorsey said that a university request for the restriction of parking or standing was filed Feb. 9 and that the removal of the signs means that the three-minute standing period will be revoked.
The present confusion began
when the red curb markings were blacked out over the Christmas holidays. Returning students thought that it meant parking on the avenue was to be legal. Parking tickets soon proved that University avenue was still a resrictcd area. City police of the University division expressed a desire to allow parking on the avenue, but university officials feared that pedestrians would be in danger when passing between the parked automobiles. They also said that the appearance of 9C’s main thorough-; fare would be ruined.
The law now prohibits parking j or standing. Traffic will be kept ■ moving on University avenue.
Architectural Design Exhibit to Open Today
An exhibit of the work of second-year architecture students in designing will go on display in the patio of Harris haljr today.
The subject of the designs is a clinic and hospital for a small California community. Drawings of a similar project are required for the recent State Board of Architecture examination. s
Under the direction of Clayton M. Baldwin, associate professor of architecture, students were instructed to design a one-story structure with concrete or masonry exterior walls for the combination clinic and 10-bed hospital.
Site for the building was to be a level northwest corner lot, 150 ieet square, with a major street to the south.
A minimum setback of 20 feet from the two street property lines
and 5 feet from the side property lines was required.
Parking space for doctors and nurses and a minimum parking area for visitors was also to be provided.
Included in the plan for the clinic were a waiting room and receptionist's office, to serve both the clinic and hospital; two doctor's offices, each with an examination and treatment room: an X-ray room; a laboratory: and a dark room.
The plan for the hospital calls for six private rooms, two wards with two beds each, a nursery, a pharmacy,^! operating room and scrub-upa delivery room, a nurses’ ^Bon. a kitchen with service ani Worage. and a sterile preparation room.
The designs will probably be on display for two weeks.
2000 Sign Vivisection Petitions
Flying Club Joins Society of Cadets
The SC chapter of Alpha Rho Omega, national professional aviation fraternity, has announced that the national conclave of the Arnold Society of Air Cadets has accepted their petition for affiliation.
Philip Kelgard. cadet major, and William J. Becker, vcie-president of the chapter, presented the petition at a recent meeting of the group in Cincinnati. The two were flown to Cincinnati by the Air Force,1 Robert E. Vivian.
Exuberant pharmacy students estimated Friday that 2000 students have signed petitions requesting the City council to release unclaimed pound animals to research institutions.
The petitions, aimed at blocking passage of an antivivisectionist ordinance before the City council, are being circulated on the Row. at the School of Dentistry building downtown, the School of Medicine division at the County hospital, and in front of the Student Union.
“Almost without exception stu-
Econome. “Twenty to fifty thousand dollars a year is given SC each year by the government for research on cardiovascular diseases. Four hundred thousand dollars has been allocated for a building to house this work, and another $200,-000 for a building for cancer research. This work cannot be done without the use of animals,” he said. The effect of high altitude flights on the heart and cir- | culation of humans cannot be determined without the use of animals.
Bob Padgett. ASSC president,
dents have been eager to .sign t ie out afc the antivivisectionists,
petitions,- said Ted Ecoi.orne, declaring antivivisectionist charges School of Pharmacy president. that an:mal experimentation was enough SC students sign these pe- ; value and served only to
titions and write their councilmen. I torture
are “totally ab
the antivivisectionists’ ordinance will be defeated,” he said.
The proposed ordinance would make it a misdemeanor for research groups to obtain unclaimed dogs and cats from the pounds for research work.
Animals are desperately needed for research work which is being conducted at SC now and which will be done in ths future,” said
torture animals are “tota I surd.” * . •
“The contributions that scientists have made in the last 50 years to alleviate human suffering could not have been made without the aid rendered by animals,” he said.
The drive for signatures is being conducted by students in Schools of Pharmacy, Dentistry, and Medicine. Econome is assisted by School of Pharmacy students George San-
ders, Fred Seech, Don Moss, Maynard Boggie, Don Pipkin, Dick Franklin, Hal Gould, Stan Barken, Bob Simons, Clell Piper, and Galen Fox.
Students in pharmacy, dentistry, and medicine wrote more than 2000 letters to the Board of Supervisors last October in protest to its action in shutting the pound to scientists.
The ASSC Senate unanimously approved a resolution at that time which declared the training of medical students and medical research was threatened by the scarcity of animals and asked that animals be released to research groups.
Al Asa-Dorian, Trovet president, said the city was losing $10,000 a year as the result of not turning over some 2000 unclaimed dogs and cats to scientists. “These animals are now being uselessly destroyed while research workers are unable to purchase the animals at $4.50 each,” Asa-Dorian said.
Logen Fox, president Phi Delta Chi, pharmacy fraternity, is in charge of securing student signatures on the row.

PAGE TWO -
illiam Saroyan Uncorks ‘Secret’ Technique
Daily
a n
- PAGE FOUR -
Norman Thomas Blasts
\
Socialism’s Critics
ol. XLI
72
Los Angeles, Calif., Monday, Mar. 20, 1950
Nlfht Phone RL 5472
No. 98
oed Office Aspirants to Be ominated at Noon Assembly
Candidates for AWS and YWCA offices and for URA en’s chairman will be introduced at the nominations as-bly in Bovard auditorium at noon today.
Speeches will be limited to one minute with the excep-of the presidential nominations and acceptance speech-
* es which may be three minutes long. Other candidates will merely accept nomination.
Candidates will be seated on the stage and nominators will speak from the floor. Both must wear suits and heels.
NEW PROCEDURE Elections are scheduled for Mar. 29. The new AWS procedure requires voters to number candidates in the order of their preference, Dorothy Walker, elections commissioner, will explain the system during the assembly.
OFFICE APPLICANTS Women who have applied for AWS offices are Nicola Hastert. president; Jeanne Eaton, Darleen Farrell. Jean Goen. Mary Jensen, and Beverly Walker, vice-president; Donna Coots, Dorothy Fucci. Marilyn Judd. Roline Rice, Carolyn Schiller, and Ila Weibel, secretary; and Francis Blevins, Jacqueline Brown, Jacque Lee Cannon. Janet
Finances t All-Time gh in 1949
spent more money last year at any time in its 70-year ry—approximately $15 million ;Ording to the annual financial jrt to the Board of Trustees, out one-third of this was due lhe new building program, the Itest ever attempted by the Unity.
ith th** majority of veterans g graduated this year and next, a decline in tuition expected, budget for the next two years j Ewart. Mary Lupfer. and Dare Robe cut back, according to Ro- land, treasurer.
YWCA candidates are Jane Aven and Wanda Lowry, president; Betty Yerxa, first vioe-president; Candy Allen, second vice-president; Pat Davis. Grace Wada. and Jane Sang-ster. secretary; and Nanette Howe, treasurer.
All candidates and their nominators should be at Bovard by 11:50 a.m.
D. Fisher, financial vice-presi-
dowment funds remain the versity's greatest need, Fisher SC had slightly more than million in endowment assets at end of the fiscal year, f the $14,630,108 spent last year, report showed that $5,066,500 for educational and general ex-ses, an increase of more than ,000 over the previous year. This j to salary raises and addit- i 1 personnel.
ther expenditures included sc- 1 ific research. $931, 228; library j $356,758; and student aid. 4.960.
w Students o Ask tor ite Diploma
Aost law students don't care for size and general design of their lomas.
Mwin Beach, member of the law dents’ Board of. Governors, said board is going to propose that ! new. larger, more distinguished king sheepskin be given grad-tes.
The appearance of the diploma is greater importance to graduates the professional schools than it to those leaving LAS.
Law, medical, and dental grads g their “graduation passports” their office walls, where it is pposed to invoke a feeling of con-dence in prospective customers. Draftsman J. Campbell, of the udio of Lettering and Design, ill create the new diploma.
The design, when completed, will ave to be approved by the law hool faculty and the department f development before it can be "opted.
NICOLA HASTERT For AWS President
Ukrainian Zeal Shown'in Film Classic Tonight
“Arsenal," a film of revolution In Russia, will be shown tonight at 8 in the Film Classics series in Hancock auditorium.
The film, made by Alexander Dovzhenko in 1929, is based on the revolutions in the Ukraine after World War L The Ukrainians, having no voice in the Russian government, were stimulated by oppression to fight against the Tsar.
In an attempt to show the spirit of the Ukrainian working class, Dovzhenko made a film that is a series of images built on each other to convey his ideas and emotions.
Dovzhe^nko’s scenes of the wartime front, and the soldiers return- | ing to the misery at home, have I been acclaimed as poetic images. 1 They are evidence of a hatred for j brutality and a faith in humanity j that is profoundly universal and grows in significance.
Tickets for the film series may be obtained at the ticket office for $3.
Senate Hears NSA Leader Deny Red Ties
Robert Kelly, president of the National S tudent association, told the ASSC Senate Friday that the NSA is neither Communist-dominated, controlled, nor backed.
NSA has been screened by the FBI and by educational'groups of which it is a member, Kelly said. “There is a possibility of Communist infiltration, but there is that possibility in every American organization todap. We do not intend to make martyrs of the Communists
by kicking them out,” he said. *---——-
Kelly pointed to the association’s
Shaw P!ay Moves Into Bovard Thursday
DR. ALBERT F. ZECH Looting Drops
Patrol Prowls
Police Operate To End Thefts
City police have notified the administration that 24 hour patrols are operating to halt the outbreak of thievery from cars parked on campus.
“The difficulty is that the thief must be observed in the act of looting to be arrested,” said Lt. P. W. Freestone of the University police station.
“Special effort by both police and students must be made at night. Students can help by securely lock-
stand toward affiliation with the j International Union of Students as indicative of NSA policy. By a unanimous vote the NSA Congress j unanimously reaffirmed its previous i decision to refuse affiliation with j IUS, which has been called a Com- j munist front organization.
A brilliant speaker, Kelly gave a . 45-minute talk built around three questions—What is NSA? What does it stand for? What has it done?
Taking the title National Students association, Kelly first defined the word “association” and
Students May Aid Faculty Senate
by SHIRLEY ICKES
International theater month will be commemorated by the SC drama department with its production of George Ber- n-,
nard Shaw's “Fanny's First Play” Thursday night in Bovard £sjhe,r automobiles, Ueutonant
auditorium.
This month, as proclaimed by UNESCO, is concerned
with the “service the theater can*-----
render to international understand-
reater-U
. committee members meet for Rod picture at noon. Check 419 tudent Union for location.
SC Chaplain To Talk Today
The necessity and desirability of being more uninformed than in-J formed will be discussed by the Rev. Clinton Neyman, in his address “If We Knew All the Answers” at noon today in Bowne : hall.
“Our certainties are fewer than our uncertainties,” he said, “and i religion, like science and all knowledge. is a constant venture into the unknown. We cannot be sure what the future holds in any aspect of j our life.”
Chaplain Neyman said that not knowing enough answers is, often embarrassihg to college students, but he emphasized his talk would not reveal how to prepare for examinations or ensure higher grade-point averages.
He opined that we may think we want to be sure of the future but questioned that we really wanted this.
William Gayland will be th^ chapel soloist.
IR Director To Give Talk
Dr. Ross N. Berkes. director of the School of International Relations. will discuss the value of a degree and the best way to prepare for a career in International Relations at an informal meeting of the IR student body in the Student lounge tomorrow night.
The discussion will be of value to students in international relations. economics, law. and political science.
Today s Headlines
by UNITED PRESS
dgar Rice Burroughs Dies
Mar. 19—Edgar Rice Burroughs. 74, creator of the “Tar-n” stories, died this morning at his home in Encino.
ationalists Strike at Mainland
TAIPEI. Formosa. Mar. 18—Chinese Nationalist forces turned to the mainland in a dawn landing today and seized Communist coastal city some 200 miles south of Shanghai.
elgian Cabinet Resigns
BRUSSELS, Belgium, Mar. 18—Premier Gaston Eyskens and hia divided cabinet resigned today in the political crisis created by bitter dispute over King Leopold’s return to the throne.
Mrs. Madsen Sentenced
FRANKFURT, Germany, Mar. 18—Mrs. Yvette Madsen was found guilty today of murdering her Air Force husband. She was sentenced to 15 years imprisonment.
ing and to the long battle for freedom. justice, and the rights of man.”
Shaw's plays have long been international favorites, playing in almost all parts of the world, and appealing to all nationalities.
His popularity is evidenced by the fact that two of his plays, “The Devil's Disciple” and “Caesar and Cleopatra," are playing on Broadway now.
An iconoclast. Shaw has continually denounced social injustices. His first plays, which he began writing after 1894, were published but not produced. They were all concerned with social problems and were read as much for their discursive prefaces as for the plays themselves
In 1910 the Shaw craze began and has never ceased. Shaw was accepted as a great playwright, a fact which he himself is the first to admit.
In “Fanny’s First Play” Shaw displays his idol-busting approach by attacking the complacency of the middle classes whose lives are surrounded by Victorian conserva-atism.
The play will run through Mar. 28, with the exception of Sunday. Admission is free with activity cards.
Cal Red Oath Is Panel Topic
Loyalty oath pros and cons will be aired by three School of Education professors at 2:15 this afternoon.
Drs. Frank C. Wegener. Wendell E. Cannon, and James D. Finn will discuss the issues raised by the University of California’s Board of Regents requiring all Cal staff members to sign a loyalty pledge.
The panel is a program in the forum series, sponsored by the Education council. The discussion will take place in 205 Administration building.
A question period will follow the panel's treatment of the question. The forum is open to all students and faculty members.
YWCA Will Hear English Educator
Social life and living conditions at German universities will be discussed this afternoon by Betty Collins. English educator who has worked with DP and other European students for several years.
Miss Collins will stress the differences between German and English universities, and the problems of every day life in Europe, in her talk at the YWCA at 2:15 p.m.
She has been in charge of the Quaker student center of the American Friends Service committee in Freiburg, since 1947. and she did much to combat postwar cynicism.
Freestone said.
Police officials are of the opinion that added lighting in parking areas would help to halt the thefts. They also believe the new parking lots are a likely spot for the thieves to strike.
Dr. Albert Zech, counsellor of men, noted that complaints of looting have dropped off during the past week.
Clerics to Hear Peace Apostle
“An Analysis of the Neo-Ortho-dox Position of War and Peace” will be the topic of two talks by A. J. Muste, theological lecturer, tomorrow and Wednesday in the Common room of the SC School of Religion.
Muste's first talk will be given
SC Debaters Beat Scotland
A shift-of-opinion ballot cast by an audience of 600 gave a majority vote to an SC debate team over a two-man team from Scotland Friday night in Bovard auditorium.
The SC team of Omar Kureishi and Ed Stegman took the negative on the topic, “Resolved, that this house looks with favor on the revival of nationalism in Europe and Asia.” The Scottish team of Dr. !
Malcolm David Webster Low and David D. T. Reid took the affirmative.
Dr. Low, the first speaker for the ! affirmative, stressed the points j
that nationalism is a liberating ^urjng n0on luncheon assembly and benefiting force and that it is -n Common room of the School an instinctive emotion for which Qf Religion:
there must be an outlet for expres- The second ta.llc will be heard at sion. He differentiated between re- Wednesday noon chapel serv-
actionary nationalism which is bom -ce Qommon room.
Muste, who has been called the “Apostle of Peace," recently re-! turned from a month's travel and study in India.
His Southern California speaking I tour is sponsored by the Fellowship ! ' of Reconciliation, Pacific South- I i west region.
Muste has been a lecturer at the 1 I Union Theological seminary. Divin- | ity School of Yale university.
Both lectures are open to stu-1 dents.
SC to Open New Building Alumni Day
Trojans of today will honor Trojans of the past and future in a double celebration combining Alumni day and the dedication of the new SC Founders Hall May 20.
Bernard Brennan, attorney, has been named by Gwynn Wilson, president of the General Alumni association, as general chairman of the day.
A program has been planned which will feature a series of symposiums by schools and departments of the University in addition to a special assembly and luncheon for returning graduates.
The day's activities are under the direction of Arnold Eddy, executive secretary of’the association.
Founders Hall is now being completed on the site of Old College.
Mexico Students Tour SC Campus
Thirty Mexican engineering students visited the SC School of Engineering Friday on their goodwill tour of the United States.
They were welcomed by Dr. Kenneth Reynolds, head of the department of general engineering, and Raymond Barber, assistant to Dean
to improve its functions. If it felt such a move would make its work more effective, it would invite the president of ASSC to appoint a man or woman, or both, to be con-
i sidered for the position, was officially accepted by the Sen- I _ , ..
If the group approved the nomate at its last meeting. ination, the student body president The report came from a commit- ; would appoint the person to the tee which had discussed the issue 1 committee as a non-voting member.
A motion that the administration consider appointing non-voting student members to standing committees of the University Senate, if a particular committee so desires,
at some length before drawing up the final resolution.
Under the new suggestion, each committee would consider the advisability of student membership
The University Senate, composed of 74 faculty and administrative officers, serves as an advisory board for the administration. Its decisions are not final rulings but are merely recommendations.
More Restrictions
0
Slapped on Parkers
of Fascism and the real nationalism which he claimed was the essential step in the emancipation of common man.
Stegman countered with the assertion that this identification with countries makes people demand that their government exert a great influence in the world at the expense of other nations.
Titoism was touched on by Steg-Dan when he said that Tito was not reviving nationalism. He felt that it was more of a self expression.
Reid's argument was based on the fact that people rush into associations without knowing where it will take them. If they wind up in an adverse position, then they look aound for a scapegoat to blame. He said that they find this scapegoat in nationalism. He then compared nationalism to a dog which is being kicked and beaten.
Reid differed with Stegman when he said that Tito was reviving nationalism in Europe and that he was the first glimmer of hope to the world.
Kureishi, arguing his last intercollegiate debate, pointed to Russia as an example of a country reviving nationalism. He said that they use it to exploit the other small countries in Europe and Asia.
Dr. Milton Dickens, acting chairman of the department of speech, presided over the debate.
ROBERT KELLY Tells of NSA
told of the organization’s membership and powers.
“We have no individual class members in NSA.” the 20-year-old president said. “We are an association—a federation of student bodies.” As such NSA is subject to the control of the student bodies and 1 their elected governments on campus. Kelly emphasized.
RETAIN AUTONOMY
NSA's member schools retain their autonomy, he said. NSA policy is subject to the consent of the local student government. This, he said, refutes charges that NSA holds coercive power.
The association is also regional, Kelly said. There are from 24 to 26 geographical districts that serve as links between the local campus and the national organization.
Speaking on the word “student" in the organization's title, he said that the association is dedicated solely to students. “There is no political or religious partisanship in NSA,” the St. Peter’s college senior said. The organization serves students and is staffed by students.
As to the “national” part of the name, Kelly said this meant not only members in all parts of the nation, but a national ideological scope. The 320 member schools range from large state universities to small denominational colleges. TELLS AIMS
Kelly said that NSA stands for (1) promotion of student govern-(Continued on Page 4)
“Red she'll be and red she’ll 1 stay,” was the word from Ralph T. Dorsey’s traffic engineering office : Friday on the controversial red curbings on University avenue.
No-parking signs will be removed this week, and all curbs will be painted red. The total effect of this operation will be to make illegal even the unloading of passengers on University avenue from 34th street to Exposition boulevard.
Dorsey said that a university request for the restriction of parking or standing was filed Feb. 9 and that the removal of the signs means that the three-minute standing period will be revoked.
The present confusion began
when the red curb markings were blacked out over the Christmas holidays. Returning students thought that it meant parking on the avenue was to be legal. Parking tickets soon proved that University avenue was still a resrictcd area. City police of the University division expressed a desire to allow parking on the avenue, but university officials feared that pedestrians would be in danger when passing between the parked automobiles. They also said that the appearance of 9C’s main thorough-; fare would be ruined.
The law now prohibits parking j or standing. Traffic will be kept ■ moving on University avenue.
Architectural Design Exhibit to Open Today
An exhibit of the work of second-year architecture students in designing will go on display in the patio of Harris haljr today.
The subject of the designs is a clinic and hospital for a small California community. Drawings of a similar project are required for the recent State Board of Architecture examination. s
Under the direction of Clayton M. Baldwin, associate professor of architecture, students were instructed to design a one-story structure with concrete or masonry exterior walls for the combination clinic and 10-bed hospital.
Site for the building was to be a level northwest corner lot, 150 ieet square, with a major street to the south.
A minimum setback of 20 feet from the two street property lines
and 5 feet from the side property lines was required.
Parking space for doctors and nurses and a minimum parking area for visitors was also to be provided.
Included in the plan for the clinic were a waiting room and receptionist's office, to serve both the clinic and hospital; two doctor's offices, each with an examination and treatment room: an X-ray room; a laboratory: and a dark room.
The plan for the hospital calls for six private rooms, two wards with two beds each, a nursery, a pharmacy,^! operating room and scrub-upa delivery room, a nurses’ ^Bon. a kitchen with service ani Worage. and a sterile preparation room.
The designs will probably be on display for two weeks.
2000 Sign Vivisection Petitions
Flying Club Joins Society of Cadets
The SC chapter of Alpha Rho Omega, national professional aviation fraternity, has announced that the national conclave of the Arnold Society of Air Cadets has accepted their petition for affiliation.
Philip Kelgard. cadet major, and William J. Becker, vcie-president of the chapter, presented the petition at a recent meeting of the group in Cincinnati. The two were flown to Cincinnati by the Air Force,1 Robert E. Vivian.
Exuberant pharmacy students estimated Friday that 2000 students have signed petitions requesting the City council to release unclaimed pound animals to research institutions.
The petitions, aimed at blocking passage of an antivivisectionist ordinance before the City council, are being circulated on the Row. at the School of Dentistry building downtown, the School of Medicine division at the County hospital, and in front of the Student Union.
“Almost without exception stu-
Econome. “Twenty to fifty thousand dollars a year is given SC each year by the government for research on cardiovascular diseases. Four hundred thousand dollars has been allocated for a building to house this work, and another $200,-000 for a building for cancer research. This work cannot be done without the use of animals,” he said. The effect of high altitude flights on the heart and cir- | culation of humans cannot be determined without the use of animals.
Bob Padgett. ASSC president,
dents have been eager to .sign t ie out afc the antivivisectionists,
petitions,- said Ted Ecoi.orne, declaring antivivisectionist charges School of Pharmacy president. that an:mal experimentation was enough SC students sign these pe- ; value and served only to
titions and write their councilmen. I torture
are “totally ab
the antivivisectionists’ ordinance will be defeated,” he said.
The proposed ordinance would make it a misdemeanor for research groups to obtain unclaimed dogs and cats from the pounds for research work.
Animals are desperately needed for research work which is being conducted at SC now and which will be done in ths future,” said
torture animals are “tota I surd.” * . •
“The contributions that scientists have made in the last 50 years to alleviate human suffering could not have been made without the aid rendered by animals,” he said.
The drive for signatures is being conducted by students in Schools of Pharmacy, Dentistry, and Medicine. Econome is assisted by School of Pharmacy students George San-
ders, Fred Seech, Don Moss, Maynard Boggie, Don Pipkin, Dick Franklin, Hal Gould, Stan Barken, Bob Simons, Clell Piper, and Galen Fox.
Students in pharmacy, dentistry, and medicine wrote more than 2000 letters to the Board of Supervisors last October in protest to its action in shutting the pound to scientists.
The ASSC Senate unanimously approved a resolution at that time which declared the training of medical students and medical research was threatened by the scarcity of animals and asked that animals be released to research groups.
Al Asa-Dorian, Trovet president, said the city was losing $10,000 a year as the result of not turning over some 2000 unclaimed dogs and cats to scientists. “These animals are now being uselessly destroyed while research workers are unable to purchase the animals at $4.50 each,” Asa-Dorian said.
Logen Fox, president Phi Delta Chi, pharmacy fraternity, is in charge of securing student signatures on the row.